Muddling through this life with an eye on the next, realizing we need all the help we can get.

Saturday, October 15, 2016

The Ouija Board: Just Say No

It seems that every October Hollywood releases at least one new horror movie, capitalizing, of course, on the spirit of Halloween, which in this country has gotten way out of control. (But that's another blog post.) Two years ago the movie Ouija made quite a splash at the box office, so much so that this year a prequel to that movie is coming out, Ouija: Origin of Evil. While interest in the movie itself isn’t necessarily of great concern (I happen to love horror movies myself), it’s the real-life obsession in the movie’s subject matter that is unsettling: the Ouija board.

Tens of millions of these “games” have been sold since their inception in the late 1800s. Modernized by Parker Brothers in the 1960s (and now sold under the Hasbro label), the board has been marketed as a harmless toy and party game. In fact, in 2008 Toys R Us even began selling a special pink edition just for little girls. How cute! Maybe the demons will wear tutus and ribbons when they come to the sleepover! (The board has since been removed from the store, but a glow-in-the-dark one is still available.)

Make no mistake: the Ouija board is not a toy. It’s not a game. It’s not harmless.

Fr. Thomas Euteneurer, exorcist and author of Exorcism and the Church Militant, is on record as saying that as many as ninety percent of the possession cases he encounters began with a Ouija board.

The late Catholic demonologist Ed Warren once called the Ouija board a “notorious passkey to terror.”

And the late Jesuit author Malachi Martin, who wrote extensively about demonic possession, once explained that the individual does not even have to intentionally engage the demonic. Simply dabbling in the occult, he believed, whether it was playing with a Ouija board or attending a séance or practicing transcendental meditation, the enneagram, etc., can dispose a person to possession because he has made himself an "aspiring vacuum" to whatever happens along.

Something “happened along” one night many, many years ago in my own life, when a young female relative who was babysitting me thought it would be fun to show me her Ouija board. She was going to try to contact a long-dead family member known only to me as “Aunt Marie.” She started moving the pointer around the board until the word “H E R E” was spelled out. My babysitter was visibly shaken, I remember that, but whether or not she was faking, I don’t know. Nothing else dramatic happened right then. But later that night after I had gone to bed, I remember waking up and seeing a very scary-looking woman coming in my room through my window. She was smiling at me maniacally and I just knew–I could feel–that her intent toward me was evil. I screamed for my parents and the vision vanished. Maybe it was just a bad dream. Nevertheless, I never saw that Ouija board again.

The relative of whom I spoke I loved dearly. When she was around 30 years old, she disappeared under mysterious circumstances and has never been heard from again. She battled many demons during the short period of her life that I knew her, the addictive, destructive kinds that are on the natural plane. I’m sure, however, that her unfortunate interest in the occult only made things worse. I hope and pray I see her again one day.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church makes it clear how we are to approach the occult:

2116: All forms of divination are to be rejected: recourse to Satan or demons, conjuring up the dead or other practices falsely supposed to “unveil” the future. Consulting horoscopes, astrology, palm reading, interpretation of omens and lots, the phenomena of clairvoyance, and recourse to mediums all conceal a desire for power over time, history, and, in the last analysis, other human beings, as well as a wish to conciliate hidden powers. They contradict the honor, respect, and loving fear that we owe to God alone.

Fr. John Zuhlsdorf offers this no-nonsense advice: “Avoid, avoid, avoid things that might open you up to oppression by the Enemy, such as Tarot cards and Ouija boards and other things that might be taken to be ‘games’. If you have those things destroy them NOW, not later.”

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Need more proof that the Ouija board is a channel for evil? This book has plenty of stories from people in all walks of life who have dabbled with the boards and have regretted it. There are some good quotes from Catholic professionals in the book as well.

1 comment:

Thank you for this! So many young people do not know the dangers of this tool of evil, as well as others. It is a slumber-party staple for many who think it is innocent fun. Our youth need to know they are playing with fire when they play with a ouija board, as seen in my novel The Gate when 13-year-old Josh receives one for his birthday. St. Michael, ora pro nobis!

Welcome!

Allow me a quick statement of purpose: This is a decidedly Catholic blog about the angels, with content drawn from the teachings and traditions of the Roman Catholic Church.

What you won't find here are discussions of spirit guides, inner angels, angel naming, angel readings, cherubic crystals, past life journeys, rebirths, channeling and other charming New Age pastimes.

What you will find, I hope, are non-boring, blessedly brief posts meant to inspire, inform, and, hopefully at times, amuse. As G.K. Chesterton once said, "Angels can fly because they take themselves lightly."

About Me

Melaine Ryther is a freelance writer whose articles, essays, and short stories have appeared in a variety of print and online magazines, including Columbia, Catholic Parent, Catholic Heritage, Catholic Digest, and The Liguorian. Her writing website can be viewed here.

In addition to Partners in Holiness, she has written several other non-fiction and fiction books, which are featured below.

A native of Minnesota, Melaine currently lives in eastern Washington State with her husband and four children.